Kenroy Williams, also known as "Booms," is "Guardian of the Reptiles" in Hellshire, located near the Goat Islands in Jamaica. The region is centered in the Portland Bight Protected Area, an area of ocean and land set apart in 1999 to protect its rich biodiversity of birds, reptiles, plants, trees and marine life.
But now, the Jamaican government
is preparing to sell the Goat Islands to the China Harbour Engineering Co. to
build a megafreighter seaport and industrial park. China Harbour is part of a conglomerate blacklisted by the World Bank under its Fraud and Corruption Sanctioning Policy.
"They're destroying what should
be preserved," says Booms, who has been working to protect exceedingly rare
reptiles in the area for seven years, including the critically endangered
Jamaican iguana.
The specifics of the development
are being withheld, but Jamaica Information Service reports it involves dredging and
land reclamation, and a coal-fired power plant built to service the facilities.
Environmentalists expect the mangrove forest on the two Goat Islands to be clear
cut and the surrounding coral reef dredged
With the threat to Goat Islands
looming, Robin Moore, a fellow with the International League of Conservation
Photographers, flew to Jamaica to record images of wildlife and people who may
soon see the destruction of their beaches, mangrove forest ecosystems and their
livelihoods.
In a short film by Moore, Booms
talks about what's at stake: "Portland Bight Protected Area consists of a
beautiful beach and things that are here in Jamaica and found nowhere else, like
the iguanas ...
"When the mangroves are
destroyed, the earth won't stay together and then the water will take over. And
that's the problem. And we won't have any beaches, and we can't do without
beaches. If we have no beaches, we have no turtles. We won't have any crocodiles
..."
Booms especially fears for the
Jamaican iguanas, Cyclura collei, thought to be extinct until 1990, when Edwin Duffus found one while hunting pigs in the Hellshire
Hills. The Goat Islands are right off the Hellshire coast. At the time,
surveys of the area revealed fewer than 100 iguanas remaining.
Hope Zoo and Botanical Gardens in
Kingston, teamed with the Fort Worth Zoo in Texas and others, set up a program
to rear baby iguanas until they're big enough to be safe from predators. After
release, the iguanas are tracked and observed to see how well they fare.
The number of nesting females
has grown from just six in 1991 to more than 30 in 2013. About 255 head-started
iguanas have been released into Hellshire, the only place on earth -- other than
the Goat Islands -- that they can survive. The Jamaica Iguana Recovery Project
believes the islands are the sanctuary necessary to save the
animal.
During the past 24 years,
millions of dollars, plus the sweat of countless biologists and research
volunteers, have been invested in bringing Cyclura collei back from the brink.
Although many released iguanas are breeding and nesting in the wild, the animal
is still critically endangered.
Jamaican iguanas can live for 40
years or more. They distinguish between strangers and researchers who come to
the forest regularly and may show themselves once they feel safe.
Imagine a 4-foot long, 15-pound
dinosaur-like animal walking out of the bush, sitting down nearby, and making
eye contact with you.
"There is indeed something
special about making eye contact with a Cyclura," herpetologist Rick Hudson, of
the Fort Worth Zoo, said. "Back in the 1990s, you rarely saw an iguana; you
might hear one crashing through the bush but glimpses were a special sight. Now,
you go out in Hellshire and see big healthy iguanas that are habituated and come
and hang out with you. It's the most incredible story I have ever been a part
of."
The Jamaican Constitution states
that the nation's citizens have "the right to enjoy a healthy and productive
environment free from the threat of injury or damage from environmental abuse
and degradation of the ecological heritage."
Some argue the project will
bring jobs, but as fisherwoman Paulette Coley told Moore: "The government claims
it will bring jobs and opportunity to the area, but we are not qualified, and we
are not being trained for the jobs that will need to be done. They tell us what
they want us to hear, but the reality is that we will be worse off."
Diana McCaulay, CEO of the
Jamaica Environment Trust, says that in past projects with Chinese contractors,
most of the employees have been Chinese. "What is the benefit to Jamaica? That's
not clear."
McCaulay says developing Goat
Islands extends the global crisis of unsustainable exploitation of natural
resources. "Jamaica is a small island," she says, "but this is happening all
over the world, relentless pressure for high impact development that doesn't
benefit local populations, particularly those who use the resources.
"Although global climate change
is a clear danger to island nations, we are still building on the coast and
taking out natural protections like mangroves. Our regulatory agencies simply
cannot cope, especially with players like China who have huge financial
resources and care little about the environment."
The rediscovery of the Jamaican
iguana and the success of the recovery program has generated a huge conservation
movement that draws international funding and ecotourism to the West Indies.
This ecotourism could be
developed. In 2012, tourism contributed close to $4 billion to the
economy of Jamaica and 25% of jobs in the country are tourism-based.
Tourists travel to see unspoiled
beaches and native flora and fauna, and ideally, to see people living in a
healthy relationship with their land. But if the Jamaican government sells out
to Chinese developers, reversing its environmental protection laws and going
against its own constitution, it will send the message that investing in tourism
in Jamaica is unwise.
There is still time to help the
Jamaican people save their national treasure. Both Jamaica and China care about
international opinion. Letters expressing concern and signatures on a petition
may persuade Prime Minister Portia Simpson-Miller to stop the proposed
development.
Of his work as guardian of the
reptiles ,Booms says, "My family and friends? Some of them think it's awesome.
... Some of them ask me if I really touch the lizards and some think I'm crazy
when they hear about the crocodiles. But the truth of the matter is that they
don't understand, and I know that. 'Cause if they were here like me, they would
understand. We are at one with nature."

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